
Liar, Liar: The Theory, Practice and Destructive Properties of Deception
The Theory, Practice and Destructive Properties Series, Book 1
فرمت کتاب
ebook
تاریخ انتشار
2011
Lexile Score
940
Reading Level
4-6
ATOS
5.8
Interest Level
4-8(MG)
نویسنده
Gary Paulsenشابک
9780375898686
کتاب های مرتبط
- اطلاعات
- نقد و بررسی
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نقد و بررسی

colinglover - Have you ever heard of compulsive Lying? Have ever heard of Gary Paulsen? Well 14 year old Kevin uses compulsive lying and thinks it's common scene. Kevin doesn't know that how much trouble that causes. Kevin also wants to prove that he is best boyfriend to this girl name Tina. Kevin uses lies to get away from class to know more about Tina. Will he go on and keep lying for himself? or Will he forget about the lies he told and keep trying to prove he is the best boyfriend for Tina? “If you ask me, people who say honesty is the best policy are just terrible liars”-Gary Paulsen

January 10, 2011
"I'm the best liar you'll ever meet," announces the glib narrator of this funny and touching novel. Fourteen-year-old Kevin inventively bends the truth to his advantage—or so he thinks. He convinces his partner on a school project that he suffers from "chronic, degenerative, relapsing-remitting imflammobetigoitis" so that she'll do all the work, pits his older siblings against each other, and surreptitiously asks his father's permission to go to a concert after his mother says no. When Kevin falls madly in love with a classmate and decides that he needs more free time to win her over, he fabricates elaborate excuses for skipping classes and feigns interest in student government to try to wiggle his way into her "inner circle" ("Like any good military mind, I decided that a direct assault was the wrong move"). In an affecting scene, the four-year-old who Kevin babysits awakens him to the value of telling the truth, setting him on a quest to untangle the web he has woven. Kevin's grappling with family troubles adds further emotional dimension to Paulsen's novel. Ages 8–12.

February 1, 2011
Eighth grader Kevin has a talent most adults can't fully appreciate: He's a gifted liar. He tells adults what they want to hear, that he's done his homework, had a great day at school and there aren't any dirty dishes in his room. Unfortunately, faced with a team project with a very focused, annoying classmate, he lets the lies get away from him. To avoid working with Katie, he tells her he has a severe chronic illness. In order to get closer to his major crush, Tina, he begins to skip classes, providing teachers with creative (but surely unbelievable) excuses. On a roll, he hits a little closer to home, playing his teen siblings off each other, then inadvertently widening the gap in his parents' relationship by lying to both of them. Each lie encourages another until, finally, the truth comes out and Kevin must face the consequences of his creative storytelling. This brief, humorous effort will appeal to reluctant middle-school readers, who will recognize the truth behind witty Kevin's inventive deceptions. (Fiction. 9-12)
(COPYRIGHT (2011) KIRKUS REVIEWS/NIELSEN BUSINESS MEDIA, INC. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.)

June 1, 2011
Gr 6-9-Kevin, 14, believes that lying is just good manners. He tells people what they want to hear and believes that in doing so he makes their lives run smoother, fosters harmony, teaches lessons, and, every once in a while, gets his own way. With all his practice, the eighth grader has become a consummate liar. When Kevin decides to leap from minor fibs to huge whoppers, he finds that keeping things under control is exceedingly difficult. His goal to make his crush fall in love with him by the end of the week gets more arduous with every mammoth falsehood. As his fabrications spread and begin to hurt his friends and loved ones, Kevin has to decide how to come clean. Kevin is a typical Paulsen character with a good heart and good intentions, who just doesn't get things right on the first try. This quick, comical tale is sure to be a hit. As usual, the author plants a moral at the conclusion, but readers won't mind because of the funny plot and over-the-top characters. A sure bet for struggling and reluctant readers.-Terry Ann Lawler, Phoenix Public Library, AZ
Copyright 2011 School Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

March 1, 2011
Grades 5-8 In this glib take on a classic morality theme, Margaret A. Edwards Awardwinner Paulsens story follows the web of deceit eigth-grader Kevin spins, primarily so he can get closer to suddenly irresistible Tina. With a clever bit of insight into human psychology, Kevins got it worked out that lying is simply the best policy to keep the social order flowing smoothly: people only listen to what they want to hear, so I only tell them that . . . . If you look at it from the right point of view, lying is just good manners. The week starts with Kevin convincing a classmate he has relapsing-remitting inflammobetigoitis so shell carry his weight on a class project, winds through his increasingly convoluted set of antic schemes, and ends with everyone becoming wise to him, before he goes about setting things right again. A quick read with bundles of laughs and a few solid but understated lessons to take away.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2011, American Library Association.)
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